Aprendiz Senior. Obrero de las telecomunicaciones. Maestro chasquilla de la programación.
Consumidor de legumbres. Fan absoluto de la música -sobre todo si es en vivo-, Batman y el Tardígrado.
Opino de todo, a veces incluso de cosas sobre las que sé. Uso #Hashtag.
[Sometimes I also toot in -a very bad- english]
Intereses:
#Música #Music #Política #Cine #Movies #Fotografía #Privacy #OpenSource #Linux #Selfhosting #Ciencia #FreeInternet #Degoogle #Chile🇨🇱 #fedi22 tfr
@selfhosted @Findmysec what is the problem with nginx? 🤔
@GravitySpoiled thanks to this post I discovered immich a couple days ago. I’ve installed in my home server and I’m currently using it to sync camera photos from my cellphone. I loved it!
I think it only lacks of a basic editor just to make things like rotate or crop photos.
@AdrianTheFrog @privacy @AceFuzzLord actually, it depends on the code. If it’s no open source you can’t really know what it is doing with your data. Therefore not all things you install in you local computer are equally insecure (or secure)
@Charger8232 @g0nz4 I guess in that case “proprietary” refers to the owners of the platform itself but not to the code of software. But then, they should make the distinction between proprietary/communitary and open source/proprietary code. Even between free/paid services. So, IMO that list from alternativeto is confusing.
@instander @squid @privacy is #instander really reliable? So far i can see, it is not open source, so I have doubts about data privacy and presence of trackers.
@privacy @linux
According to most of the responses so far, Eeementary is not the best choice. So I think I will try #LinuxMint as the first option.
I’m a very satisfied proxmox user and I have almost all applications deployed with VM or containers. If you’re no a begginer into Linux/nas I think it is the best choice. On the other hand I would totally discard TrueNAS because it is too restrictive and hard to customize.
@sodamnfrolic @selfhosted